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Social isolation facing war veterans and an anomaly that denies war pension support to a partly dependent parent after a soldier dies in action were among issues highlighted at a Dunedin conference on veterans' health yesterday.

During a discussion at the conference, Tina Grant, New Zealand Army liaison officer for families of the fallen, commented on an issue she had encountered involving single soldiers killed in action, and where a dependent parent was ineligible for war pension support.

Ms Grant said that if fallen soldiers had a spouse or partner, they would be entitled to war pension support, but the dependent mother or father of a single fallen soldier was not.

"If I had a magic wand, I'd wave it and make sure it's fair across the board," she said in an interview.

Appropriate pension support needed to be given to other people - such as a mother or father - who had depended on their child for crucial family support.

She was aware of a mother who did not enjoy good health and had limited funds. Her son had been helping in various ways, including with extensive renovations of her house, but these had been left unfinished after he was killed in action.

When New Zealand soldiers were sent abroad, there was a moral obligation to ensure their families were properly supported, she said.

When a soldier died, a memorial cross broach was provided to the soldier's wife and mother, and that mother often needed other support as well.

A major update of the country's war pension law is being undertaken, and Ms Grant said "I think it needs updating".

New Zealand families were now more varied and complex than previously, and individual "family dynamics" - including the presence of dependent parents - needed to be fully taken into account, she said.

More than 40 people have been attending the two-day conference, organised in association with a University of Otago Research Theme focusing on the health of veterans, serving personnel and their families.

In a talk on the first day of the conference, Margaret Snow, advocacy and support manager at the Royal New Zealand Returned Services Association, Wellington, also highlighted isolation issues facing returning veterans.

Mrs Snow understood New Zealand war pensions had provided support for a dependent parent some years ago, and she would be raising the support concerns raised yesterday with senior RSA managers.